What I’ve Learned About Cycling Freshwater Aquariums

Cycling your aquarium for the first time is one of those rites of passage in the aquarium hobby that everyone must do. When people first come into contact with the subject, it's confusing and intimidating because it's often referred to as the nitrogen cycle. Say what now?? I just want my dang Betta fish to live. I didn’t realize I was going to have to learn chemistry!

This is not a definitive guide to cycling an aquarium. This is how I cycle aquariums. I use a fishless cycle by dosing ammonia but there are other methods which are not covered here because I do not use those methods. This is the best method in my estimation.

What is the nitrogen cycle?

There are many great explanations on the internet, but in short, the nitrogen cycle is the process by which bacteria convert ammonia to nitrites and then nitrites to nitrates, making your aquarium water safe for fish.

This cycle is important because fish waste contains ammonia, which is toxic for fish and other aquatic critters.

"Cycling" your tank means purposefully growing the bacteria colonies (beneficial bacteria) needed for the nitrogen cycle to happen in your aquarium.

Prerequisites

In addition to your aquarium and the equipment to make it work (lights, filter, heater), you’ll want a few additional items before starting the cycle.

Starting your cycle!

We’re now ready to start the nitrogen cycle in the aquarium.

  1. Set up the aquarium. Add substrate, rocks, driftwood, aquarium decorations, filter, heater, lights, and any plants you have on hand, if adding live plants.
  2. Add water and water conditioner.
  3. Test the water. When I'm starting my cycle, I like to test the water before adding the ammonia. I’ve tested the tap water before and found surprisingly high amounts of ammonia. This step is probably not needed by most, but I do it for peace of mind.
  4. Add ammonia. You’ll need to calculate how many mL of ammonia to add to your aquarium based on its size so that there is 2 ppm in the water. The instructions are on the bottle. Use the small syringe/pipettes to measure.
  5. Test the water again. I give my tank about 30 minutes, then I test the water again to verify the ammonia is at the right concentration. I only do this when I’m starting the cycle to verify I have the math right.
  6. Add beneficial bacteria. The best thing you can do is get some used filter media from an established tank if you have access to it. You can either squeeze the “gunk” from the used filter into your filter or, if you have the same filter, just use it directly! If you don’t have access to used filter media, then just wait. Dave at Aquarium Science has performed some tests and says the “bacteria in a bottle” products are ineffective for reducing the cycle time. I believe him.
  7. Wait!

Definition of 'Cycled'

Your tank is cycled when it can convert 2 ppm ammonia to nitrates in 24 hours. That is, if you add enough ammonia to your tank to hit 2 ppm, when you test it the next day, it should have 0 ammonia, 0 nitrites, and some nitrates.

Monitoring the cycle

Immediately after setting up my tank, I do not perform my first water test until the 5th day or thereabouts. It takes a few days for the bacteria that eat ammonia to get established.

Sticking the landing and verifying results

After 3–4 weeks of testing your water every few days, your water tests will show the ammonia test as yellow (0!), nitrites as blue (0!), and nitrates as orange/red (some nitrates!). Rejoice because we’re very close now, and we just need to verify the results.

I like to dose 2 ppm again. If the test results are good after 24 hours, then I consider my tank cycled and I’m ready for fish. In my experience, I have to verify 2–3 days in a row before all nitrites are completely gone.

If it’s going to be a few days before I can add fish, I’ll dose the tank daily while it’s empty with a partial ammonia dose to keep the bacteria humming along.

The last 3 tanks I’ve cycled using this method have taken 3–4 weeks to complete.

Conclusion

That’s it! I hope someone who doesn’t know much about cycling their tank finds this post and finds it useful. Thanks for reading.

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